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The Folkerts SK-2, also known as Speed King Two, "Toots" and "Miss Detroit" was a racer built for the 1936 National Air Races

SK-2
Folkerts SK-2
Role Racing aircraft
National origin United States of America
Designer Clayton Folkerts, Harold Neumann, Ted Forden
Introduction 1936
Number built 1
Variants Folkerts SK-3

Design and development


Clayton Folkerts designed his second racer, the SK-2 Toots after leaving the Mono-Aircraft Company, and Waco.[1] It was commissioned by TWA pilot Harold Neumann in 1936.

The aircraft was a mid-winged conventional geared aircraft with crank activated retractable landing gear and trailing edge flaps. The fuselage was built of welded steel tube with aircraft fabric covering and the wings were made with spruce spars and plywood covering. The Menasco C-4S engine featured a one-foot propeller extension to allow a more streamlined cowling.[2]


Operational history


In the 1936 National Air Races, Harold Neumann won three firsts, two seconds, and placed fourth in the Thompson Trophy race. Steve Wittman survived a flight in the SK-2 with a ruptured gas tank that leaked into the cockpit. In St. Louis, pilot Roger Don Rae landed gear up, badly damaging the aircraft.

At the 1937 National Air Races, the aircraft was renamed "Miss Detroit" and pilot Roger Don Rae placed three seconds and one fourth place.

In the 1938 Oakland Air Races, the rear fuselage was metalized. Pilot Gus Gotch was chosen as pilot; he entered a spin on a pylon turn and was killed when the aircraft struck the bay.[3] The cause was undetermined, but fellow racing pilots blamed the heavy locking mechanism for the landing gear as a contributing distraction in high-speed low level flight.[4]


Variants


The Folkerts SK-3 has a nearly identical design, except for a longer nose for a Menasco C-6S-4 engine.[5]


Specifications (Folkerts SK-1)


Data from Sport Aviation.

General characteristics

Performance


See also


Related development


References


Notes
  1. Sport Aviation. October 1958. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Aero Digest. October 1938. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. AAHS Journal (American Aviation Historical Society), Volume 34.
  4. "Aviation's Guinea Pigs." Popular Science, September 1938, pp. 92–93.
  5. Aeronautics, Volume 44, 1961.
Bibliography





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